Research Classification
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Relevant Thesis-Based Degree Programs
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Recruitment
Dog training; feral rabbit housing; vet service deserts.
The ideal applicant for an MSc position is an undergraduate student who has previously conducted an independent research project through their institution (e.g., Undergraduate Thesis) on a relevant research topic, presented their research in a scientific forum, worked extensively as a Research Assistant for an established lab, and has a great passion to pursue graduate school and their research topic. An ideal applicant for a PhD position is a MSc student, who has completed an independent research project and has published or submitted their manuscript for publication. Additionally, the applicant must demonstrate an interest and ability to secure external funding, interest and ability to present their research in scientific conferences, have a strong ability to work with the broader scientific and professional community, and has a passion for their topic of research. Ideal applicants must demonstrate great interpersonal skills, high motivation to learn, and be very curious and open to new ideas. Applicants must be good writers and be comfortable speaking publicly- as most of grad school and beyond is writing and speaking! Knowledge of basic statistics and familiarity with R is preferred. Familiarity with basic behaviour principles, and research methods in animal behaviour is preferred. Unique skills such as programming, qualitative analysis, etc. are very welcome. Please contact me directly with your CV and interests at least 1 year before your intended start date. For example, if you would like to start graduate school in September 2026, you should contact me by September 2025. That way, if we are a good fit for each other, we can work on creating a research proposal and securing scholarships/ fellowships. For example, MSc students can aim to submit a Canada Graduate Scholarship November. However, prospective PhD students must begin even earlier as the deadlines are in October.
Complete these steps before you reach out to a faculty member!
Check requirements
- Familiarize yourself with program requirements. You want to learn as much as possible from the information available to you before you reach out to a faculty member. Be sure to visit the graduate degree program listing and program-specific websites.
- Check whether the program requires you to seek commitment from a supervisor prior to submitting an application. For some programs this is an essential step while others match successful applicants with faculty members within the first year of study. This is either indicated in the program profile under "Admission Information & Requirements" - "Prepare Application" - "Supervision" or on the program website.
Focus your search
- Identify specific faculty members who are conducting research in your specific area of interest.
- Establish that your research interests align with the faculty member’s research interests.
- Read up on the faculty members in the program and the research being conducted in the department.
- Familiarize yourself with their work, read their recent publications and past theses/dissertations that they supervised. Be certain that their research is indeed what you are hoping to study.
Make a good impression
- Compose an error-free and grammatically correct email addressed to your specifically targeted faculty member, and remember to use their correct titles.
- Do not send non-specific, mass emails to everyone in the department hoping for a match.
- Address the faculty members by name. Your contact should be genuine rather than generic.
- Include a brief outline of your academic background, why you are interested in working with the faculty member, and what experience you could bring to the department. The supervision enquiry form guides you with targeted questions. Ensure to craft compelling answers to these questions.
- Highlight your achievements and why you are a top student. Faculty members receive dozens of requests from prospective students and you may have less than 30 seconds to pique someone’s interest.
- Demonstrate that you are familiar with their research:
- Convey the specific ways you are a good fit for the program.
- Convey the specific ways the program/lab/faculty member is a good fit for the research you are interested in/already conducting.
- Be enthusiastic, but don’t overdo it.
Attend an information session
G+PS regularly provides virtual sessions that focus on admission requirements and procedures and tips how to improve your application.
ADVICE AND INSIGHTS FROM UBC FACULTY ON REACHING OUT TO SUPERVISORS
These videos contain some general advice from faculty across UBC on finding and reaching out to a potential thesis supervisor.
Graduate Student Supervision
Master's Student Supervision
Theses completed in 2010 or later are listed below. Please note that there is a 6-12 month delay to add the latest theses.
Providing a choice: individual dogs' preferences for activity-based environmental enrichment in an animal shelter (2024)
Activity-based environmental enrichment is known to benefit the welfare of shelter dogs, yet individual preferences remain understudied. This thesis aims to address the gap in measuring enrichment efficacy, investigate if preference tests can identify individual preferences for activity-based enrichment, and compare these findings to behavioural outcomes. I conducted two experimental procedures to assess shelter dogs’ behaviour: a preference test and a behavioural evaluation. In the preference test, six dogs were asked to repeatedly (3-4 trials/day) enter a T-maze, choosing between an off-leash play yard and an on-leash walking trail for 10 minutes each. Preference was assessed using a binomial distribution test against a 50% baseline (α = .05). To validate preferences and assess the dogs' ability to track contingencies, a control phase was introduced, where the preferred exit led to the kennel and the alternate to the preferred enrichment. In the behavioural evaluation, three dogs underwent two additional sessions in both the yard and the trail. Their exploratory and stress-associated behaviours were recorded 10 minutes before, during, and immediate after each session, and scored in every five-second bin by an independent observer and myself. Due to the small sample size, no statistical analyses were undertaken. My observations focused on changes in stress-associated behaviours and differences in exploratory behaviours, visually represented on graphs. Preference could be determined for four dogs (n = 21 trials): Aerial (P(X≥17) = .004, Sky (P(X≥16) = .013), and Timber (P(X≥14) = .015) preferred the yard, while Beau (P(X≥16) = .013) preferred the trail, each averaging 10 trials. Allara (P(X≥13) = .190) and Gina (P(X≥13) = .190) showed no distinct preference. In the control phase, Allara’s preference for the kennel suggested potential influences such as weather, past history, or difficulty in choice discrimination. Conversely, Gina’s choices for the trail demonstrated her ability to track contingencies. Results from the behavioural evaluation revealed increased exploratory behaviours during preferred enrichment but varied changes in stress-associated behaviours post-enrichment. While dogs’ preferences for activity-based environmental enrichment can be identified through preference tests, the access to these preferences does not always align with positive behavioural outcomes.
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Implications of international dog rescue operations on Canadian sheltering practices (2023)
The international movement of dogs has garnered considerable attention in recent years due to its rapid growth in popularity and occurrence on a global scale. Estimates suggests over 1 million dogs were imported into the United States (US) and over 300,000 dogs to the United Kingdom each year before 2021. Although the official number of dogs arriving at Canada is unknown, Canadian local professionals reported that at least 6,000 dogs were imported in 2013. Zoonotic disease risks and concerns associated with illegal dog import activities, has led US and Canada placing a temporary suspension on all commercial importation of dogs arriving from non-rabies free countries. The importation of dogs has also been associated with concerns for the dog’s behaviour given lack of knowledge on the animal’s backgrounds. To understand the potential implications of commercial dog importation on the owners, the first objective of my thesis was to investigate the effect of dog’s source on the owner-dog relationship. Two independent surveys were sent to dog owners in British Columbia to examine owner-reported assessments of their Canadian vs non-Canadian sourced dogs. I found no evidence of owner-reported poorer welfare for non-Canadian dogs. The second objective of my thesis was to understand why Canadian dog rescue organizations engaged in international dog rescue, and to explore common challenges faced in their line of work. To explore the perspectives of members from this community, I interviewed representatives of Canadian-based international dog rescue organizations. The views of my participants indicated that they were driven by a strong desire to help, but faced logistical and societal barriers that made the development of local rescue partnerships more challenging. Rescue members voiced concerns regarding stigma associated with their work, and expressed a lack of support from other stakeholders. I conclude that imported rescue dogs can be successfully adopted into homes in Canada, but more efforts can be made to support individual rescue organizations that engage in dog import.
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Publications
- A mixed-method analysis of the consistency of intake information reported by shelter staff upon owner surrender of dogs (2025)
Journal of Applied Animal Welfare Science, 28 (2), 259-280 - Drug use stigma, accidental pet poisonings, and veterinary care: results from a survey of pet owners in Vancouver, British Columbia (2025)
Frontiers in Veterinary Science, 12 - Exploring the impact of a brief positive experience on dogs’ performance and stress resilience during a learning task (2025)
Plos One, 20 (6 June) - Factors influencing a hand-touch learning task outcome in the domestic dog (Canis lupus familiaris) (2025)
Applied Animal Behaviour Science, 283 - Review of Collars, Harnesses, and Head Collars for Walking Dogs (2025)
Animals, 15 (15) - “It's my calling”, Canadian dog rescuers' motives and experiences for engaging in international dog rescue efforts (2024)
Plos One, 19 (5 May) - A mixed-methods analysis of similarities and differences in animal shelter staff, dog behavior professionals, and the public in determining kenneled dog welfare (2024)
Journal of Applied Animal Welfare Science, 27 (4), 761-778 - Effect of pre-session discrimination training on performance in a judgement bias test in dogs (2024)
Animal Cognition, 27 (1) - Erratum: Correction: The role of artificial photo backgrounds of shelter dogs on pet profile clicking and the perception of sociability (PloS one (2021) 16 12 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0255551) (2024)
Plos One, 19 (12), e0315522 - Exploring breed differences in discrimination, reversal learning, and resistance to extinction in the domestic dog (Canis familiaris) (2024)
Scientific Reports, 14 (1) - Rabbit intakes and predictors of their length of stay in animal shelters in British Columbia, Canada (2024)
Plos One, 19 (4 April) - Daily gabapentin improved behavior modification progress and decreased stress in shelter cats from hoarding environments in a double-blind randomized placebo-controlled clinical trial (2023)
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 261 (9), 1305-1315 - Exploring the Social Reinforcing Value of Brushing in Equine-Assisted Services: A Comparative Study with Food Reinforcement (2023)
Human Animal Interactions, 2023 - Predictors of successful diversion of cats and dogs away from animal shelter intake: Analysis of data from a self-rehoming website (2023)
Animal Welfare, 32 - The human-animal bond and at-home behaviours of adopted Indian free-ranging dogs (2023)
Applied Animal Behaviour Science, 268 - Animal Placement and Follow-Up (2022)
Animal Behavior for Shelter Veterinarians and Staff, 634-658 - Behaviour Real-Time Spatial Tracking Identification (BeRSTID) used for Cat Behaviour Monitoring in an Animal Shelter (2022)
Scientific Reports, 12 (1) - Consumer attitudes toward bacteriophage applications to pet food (2022)
Frontiers in Veterinary Science, 9 - Effect of a provincial feline onychectomy ban on cat intake and euthanasia in a British Columbia animal shelter system (2022)
Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery, 24 (8), 739-744 - Interviews with Indian Animal Shelter Staff: Similarities and Differences in Challenges and Resiliency Factors Compared to Western Counterparts (2022)
Animals, 12 (19) - Investigation into owner-reported differences between dogs born in versus imported into Canada (2022)
Plos One, 17 (6 June) - Rats as pets: Predictors of adoption and surrender of pet rats (Rattus norvegicus domestica) in British Columbia, Canada (2022)
Plos One, 17 (2 February 2022) - Reasons for Guardian-Relinquishment of Dogs to Shelters: Animal and Regional Predictors in British Columbia, Canada (2022)
Frontiers in Veterinary Science, 9 - Behavioral correlates of urinary output in shelter cats (2021)
Applied Animal Behaviour Science, 241 - Climate Change and Companion Animals: Identifying Links and Opportunities for Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies (2021)
Integrative and Comparative Biology, 61 (1), 166-181 - Exploring the Relationship Between Human Social Deprivation and Animal Surrender to Shelters in British Columbia, Canada (2021)
Frontiers in Veterinary Science, 8 - Inequitable Flow of Animals in and Out of Shelters: Comparison of Community-Level Vulnerability for Owner-Surrendered and Subsequently Adopted Animals (2021)
Frontiers in Veterinary Science, 8 - Intake Vaccinations Reduced Signs of Canine Respiratory Disease During an Outbreak at an Animal Shelter (2021)
Frontiers in Veterinary Science, 8 - The role of artificial photo backgrounds of shelter dogs on pet profile clicking and the perception of sociability (2021)
Plos One, 16 (12 December) - A multi-site feasibility assessment of implementing a best-practices meet-and-greet intervention in animal shelters in the United States (2020)
Animals, 10 (1) - Comparison of contingent and noncontingent access to therapy dogs during academic tasks in children with autism spectrum disorder (2020)
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 53 (2), 811-834 - Human–dog relationships during the COVID-19 pandemic: booming dog adoption during social isolation (2020)
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, 7 (1) - Minor procedural variations affect canine behavior during sociability assessments (2020)
Behavioural Processes, 177 - Occupational Health of Animal Shelter Employees by Live Release Rate, Shelter Type, and Euthanasia-Related Decision (2020)
Anthrozoos, 33 (1), 119-131 - The impact of caring and killing on physiological and psychometric measures of stress in animal shelter employees: A pilot study (2020)
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17 (24), 1-18 - Behavioral predictors of subsequent respiratory illness signs in dogs admitted to an animal shelter (2019)
Plos One, 14 (10) - The effects of exercise and calm interactions on in-kennel behavior of shelter dogs (2018)
Behavioural Processes, 146, 54-60 - Adoption and relinquishment interventions at the animal shelter: A review (2017)
Animal Welfare, 26 (1), 35-48 - Impacts of Encouraging Dog Walking on Returns of Newly Adopted Dogs to a Shelter (2017)
Journal of Applied Animal Welfare Science, 20 (4), 357-371 - Effects of sheltering on physiology, immune function, behavior, and the welfare of dogs (2016)
Physiology and Behavior, 159, 95-103 - Evaluating a humane alternative to the bark collar: Automated differential reinforcement of not barking in a home-alone setting (2016)
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 49 (4), 735-744 - Judging a Dog by Its Cover: Morphology but Not Training Influences Visitor Behavior toward Kenneled Dogs at Animal Shelters (2016)
Anthrozoos, 29 (3), 469-487 - Olfaction in wild canids and Russian canid hybrids (2016)
Canine Olfaction Science and Law Advances in Forensic Science Medicine Conservation and Environmental Remediation, 57-66 - Preference assessments and structured potential adopter-dog interactions increase adoptions (2016)
Applied Animal Behaviour Science, 176, 87-95 - Proximate causes of cognition (2016)
Animal Cognition Principles Evolution and Development, 1-26 - Improving in-kennel presentation of shelter dogs through response-dependent and response-independent treat delivery (2015)
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 48 (3), 590-601 - The role of environmental and owner-provided consequences in canine stereotypy and compulsive behavior (2015)
Journal of Veterinary Behavior Clinical Applications and Research, 10 (1), 24-35 - Adopter-dog interactions at the shelter: Behavioral and contextual predictors of adoption (2014)
Applied Animal Behaviour Science, 157, 109-116 - Association between increased behavioral persistence and stereotypy in the pet dog (2014)
Behavioural Processes, 106, 77-81 - In-kennel behavior predicts length of stay in shelter dogs (2014)
Plos One, 9 (12) - The effects of social training and other factors on adoption success of shelter dogs (2012)
Applied Animal Behaviour Science, 142 (1-2), 61-68
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